“Women that take initiative and pay for dates exude self-confidence. Equally, men who are confident should find no issue in women who take control in this way. This reinforces each gender's actions; only unconfident men would see it as a threat.”

Stott also adds that women are aware of the financial pressure dating can have on men and that they don’t want to take advantage.

“Dating apps mean that people are dating way more than they used to,“ she explains.

“For men to adhere to the traditional (and outdated) view of paying for and initiating dates all the time, they are likely to face emotional — and financial — burnout.

“Modern women are aware of this and for the most part, don’t want to take advantage.”

Of course, not all couples are heterosexual meaning that, for many people in the dating world, gender roles which suggest a man should always pay for a woman are obsolete.

Instead, the deciding factors for who should pay for the date become more impartial.

From who asked whom out to going 50:50 or flipping a coin, there really is no right or wrong way to settle your first date bill.

This isn’t the first time the contentious topic has been discussed though. Earlier this year an episode of First Dates sparked a debate into who should pay on the first date after 23-year-old Cecilia insisted on paying for the meal she had just enjoyed with Viv, 26.

After engaging in a heated back-and-forth, the couple ultimately decided to split the bill but Cecilia later explained that she found the whole thing frustrating.

“I thought it was completely irrational. It was really unnecessary and quite uncalled for,” she said.